Navigation
- After Katrina, a Lonely Homecoming
By Peter Whoriskey
- Peter Whoriskey in The Washington Post describes how most of New Orleans’ neighborhoods still remain abandoned two years after Katrina.
- "Today, nearly two years after the storm, 11 of 14 properties on the block stand vacant, and in interviews, all but one of those who left indicated they have no intention of returning. Far from rising from the devastation of Katrina, this slice of St. Bernard Parish remains a desolate and depressing place."
"It is a scene repeated in flood-ravaged neighborhoods elsewhere along the Gulf Coast, especially parts of the Lower Ninth Ward, Gentilly and New Orleans East. In St. Bernard, most of the 67,000 residents have not returned. The massive desertions are evidence that Katrina's destructive effects are no longer acute but chronic and that, as evacuees set down roots elsewhere, many close-knit communities blasted apart by the storm may never return."
"Exactly who is to blame for the persistent abandonment is a matter of argument here."
"Some point to the FEMA-led rebuilding bureaucracy, which has proved unequal at times to the challenge of rapidly rebuilding the vast wreckage. Others cite paperwork delays plaguing the state-run 'Road Home' program, which -- eventually -- is supposed to distribute federal funds to homeowners."
]
Tags: New Orleans / Katrina / Urban Redevelopment / Preservation / Homelessness / Reconstruction
Source: The Washington Post, Aug 26, 2007
Full Story: After Katrina, A Lonely Homecoming